Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Partnership with Tailored to Hire
Tailored to Hire provides assistance and guidance for every step of the job seeking process from resume building and getting through the application process to one-on-one interview skills workshops, and clothing assistance for interviews and/or work uniforms. They also work with businesses who are looking for employees to help find the right "fit."
Wanda has already begun to craft a program tailored specifically to the RootsUp mission for community building and empowerment. This program will teach important job seeking/retaining skills including: job resource location, networking, resume building, interview skills, workplace etiquette and budgeting.
Welcome to the team, Wanda and Tailored to Hire! We are so glad to be working with you!
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Target Community Unveiled!
This location is very diverse and ripe for community work. This relatively small area includes many important community elements which can be tied together to support each other and grow. The area consists of housing from low-income housing projects to upper-middle class homes. There are at least two known thriving neighborhood associations including Haight Village and The Orchid Neighborhood Association. Large businesses such as Behr Recycling can be found in tract 10 as well as small businesses like Ricotta's Automotive. Public service buildings can also be found in tract 10 such as the 9-1-1 building and the Winnebago County Health Department. Tract 10 has two public parks, one public school, several churches of varied denominations, and a Boys and Girls Club. Most importantly,the people living in tract 10 meets all of the demographic standards of need that have we have established.
RootsUp is very excited to begin working with the people of Tract 10. Our first orders of operation will be to meet with the existing businesses, organizations, and neighborhood associations to gain insight into the existing assets and needs of the area. More to come on this as it unfolds!
Friday, April 15, 2011
Giving to RootsUp
So where will your money go if you donate to RootsUp?
RootsUp is about one thing: building community through the support of women and children. Our projects will always have those goals in view. RootsUp will be working within a specifically-defined geographical location in its community-building efforts.
So what is RootsUp going to do in its chosen area? We have several projects simmering: community classes, services networking, early literacy services, parenting support, job skills training, especially for women, and skills workshops for young adults.
We are looking for volunteers and financial contributions to help support these important projects. Our goal is to drastically change the face of the area we work in; recoloring its place on the map to make it a vibrant, thriving community that supports the success of its people and that is supported by the success of its people. Who wouldn't feel great about being a part of that?
Monday, April 11, 2011
Sew-In Success!
Those who were unable to come to the sew-in have offered their generous help in other ways, some contributing materials and others contributing time. Altogether we need to make 15 large bags, 15 oil cloth bags, 45 liners and 135 inserts. We are far from finished but plugging along at a very nice speed, collecting volunteers as we go along. We have even recruited some of the employees of the fabric stores we have been frequenting!
I would very much like to hold another sew-in this month to give the project one more nice hearty boost. It's a very busy time for us and organizing another sew-in may be a scheduling nightmare but I hope to have these kits ready to send off by mid-May. If you are interested in participating in this project we can use your help! Please contact us at RootsUpRockford@gmail.com
Monday, April 4, 2011
Busy, Busy!
Saturday, I will equip my household with lots of coffee, sweet rolls, muffins, and other assorted breakfast items and hold a "sew in" with open invitation. Everyone will be able to come and help with cutting, finishing, sewing, or any other task while our kids tear the house down! It should be a good time and for a good cause too. Cheers!
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
International Partners for Education
IPE’s primary mission is supporting the secondary education of girls in St. James Presbyterian Church of Blantyre, Malawi who have been orphaned (lost one or both parents) by HIV/AIDS and support them as they matriculate.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Half the Sky
Sunday, February 6, 2011
School closings effect communities...
We understand the dismal situation the district finds itself in right now. The term being used—'budget crisis'—seems to be accurate. The economy sucks right now so the state of Illinois is in a budget crisis and scrambling to figure out which programs it can cut to stay afloat, meanwhile not having the money it promised to our school district, who'd been counting on the money. The situation in Rockford is also quite grim with our high unemployment rate. People out of work are often unable to pay their taxes, which means there is less money the district has to work with.
The questionable spending habits of the district, and our superintendent in particular, aside (though perhaps the distribution of our tax dollars is pertinent) cuts inevitably need to be made. The targeted proposal to close area neighborhood schools, however, is troubling.
What is a neighborhood school to a community? It's a question we may not be able to answer until the school is gone and the building sits like a rotting piece of fruit. It is like a magnet for troublesome teens who find spray painting obscenities amusing. Windows are broken and graffiti plagues the walls and suddenly the neighborhood isn't what it once was.
I know this because the school I attended as a child, my neighborhood school growing up, closed down. It was rumored to have become home to squatters who shot up in the old classrooms and pissed on the gym floor. The neighborhood crime rates soared and the climate went from saying hi to strangers to avoiding eye contact in fear of who this person might be, what this person could be capable of. It became a dirty, run down, distrustful neighborhood—a stark contrast to the clean, lively, friendly neighborhood when the school was open.
Because we are interested in working with communities here in Rockford, I do think the proposed school closings are of concern to us in RootsUp. The schools that close may be communities we want to explore working in to preemptively stop the negative neighborhood effects of a closed school. When we are working on projects to advance early literacy and the district proposes to close an early childhood center and move to half day kindergarten, it makes me think the need for our work will be that much greater should the proposal be actualized. Whatever the school board decides will have a deep impact on Rockford's community and may define the direction of our projects in the upcoming years. |
Saturday, January 22, 2011
By your Bootstraps
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Upcoming Book Discussions
There are a number of book discussions on Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide in the community. This book is what inspired the formation of RootsUp and we really encourage everyone to read the book and attend a discussion. One of the authors, Sheryl WuDunn will be coming to Rockford College to speak on March 15, 2011. It should be an inspiring lecture! Book Discussion dates and locations: January 25, 2010: Book discussion at Rockford Public Library main branch 6:30 -7:45p.m. February 16, 2011: Book discussion at Wired Cafe on State St., 6-7:30 p.m. February 22, 2011: Book discussion at Katie's Cup on 7th St., 6-7:30 p.m. February 24, 2011: Book discussion at Carlyle Brewery, 7-8:30 p.m. Email rootsuprockford@gmail.com with any questions. |
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
A Reason to Celebrate!
Our next meeting will be January 20, 2011 at 6pm. Please contact us if you're interested in getting involved in RootUp, email us at: rootsuprockford@gmail.com